10 Questions for Julie Berry

My second victim author for the 10 Questions feature is the delightful Julie Berry, whose first book, Amaranth Enchantment — an interesting Cinderella-like fantasy/fairy tale for upper-middle grade readers — I thoroughly enjoyed.

MF: This is your first novel, congrats! Can you tell us a bit about the process of writing it and getting published?
JB: It took me about a year to write it. I was a graduate student at Vermont College’s MFA in Writing for Children and Young Adults when I wrote it, under the direction of advisers Cynthia Leitich Smith, Brent Hartinger, and Tim Wynne-Jones. I learned so much from each of them. I worked on it nearly every day, generally in the evenings after my children were in bed. It took many starts and stops before I figured out Lucinda’s story, as well as the tone and voice of the final piece. It was a lot of work, but I loved writing this story, and loved its characters.

As for getting it published, it won a prize at Vermont College, for which I remain forever grateful. I met an agent at an SCBWI conference and told her about the prize. She asked to see a few chapters, so I sent them. She offered me representation, and after we’d made a few revisions to the manuscript, she sent it out to several publishers, and before long we had a deal with Bloomsbury.

MF: Sounds like it was a charmed experience… Did you set out to write a young adult/middle grade novel, or did you just write the story and let the publishers decide?
JB: It’s always been my hope to write for children and young adults. It’s my genre of choice.

MF: Is being a writer something you’ve “always” wanted to do, or is it something you’ve discovered later in life? Do you have any specific writing influences?
JB: I think I always had deep-down authorial hopes, as I suspect most book lovers do. I majored in communication in college and had done professional writing of all sorts during my career, so I knew I had some capability with words, but I never knew whether or not I had the knack for fiction. It was on my “try before I die,” list. Part of me was afraid to try and learn that I did not have the knack. That, I thought, would be devastating. But after I’d had my fourth son, I began to think more about that dream. I imagined myself rocking on my front porch one day, old and blind, and regretting that I’d never tried. That thought become more scary to me than trying and failing. So I gave it a go, and I’m so glad I did.

MF: I think that’s very admirable. Trying something new, taking a risk, especially when you’ve got a family. Speaking of which: you have four boys (I’ve got four girls, about the same ages…) and a job. How on earth did/do you find time to write? Do you find it difficult juggling everything?
JB:Yes! Yes, yes, yes. I find it incredibly difficult juggling everything. But I am learning how to live with difficulty and juggling. (Incidentally, I can juggle. 🙂 I’ve had to get very creative about when and where I write. I write late at night, and I write early in the morning. I generally never wrote when the children were awake, because they needed my attention, and anyway, they’re far too distracting! Now I sometimes have to. The older my children get, the busier they get, which has its pros and cons. It means our lives are more scheduled, jumping from pillar to post, but it also means they’ve got interests of their own, and I can find 30 minutes here, 50 minutes there in which to make some progress with a scene. My house is fairly chaotic most of the time. My job is part-time, and it gives me a great deal of flexibility. Some times I wish I didn’t wear so many hats, but I recognize that they all make me who I am and keep life interesting.

MF: A bit about the book: I really enjoyed the combination of history and religion and fantasy in The Amaranth Enchantment. Can you tell us a bit about how you came up with the idea(s) behind the book?
JB: The first thought I had was about a decaying mansion full of memories. That became Lucinda’s home. The next was about an enigmatic woman who had a connection to the supernatural. At first I thought that might be ghosts. Eventually I figured out she was a trapped and unhappy immortal, stuck in a world full of people who die. It took longer to figure out my main character, Lucinda. It became clear early on that she needed to be an orphan, and that led to developing her backstory. The process of writing forces you to answer so many questions. I come across a question that needs answering, cast about in my mind for possibilities, and go with the one that feels most right.

MF: I totally missed that it was a Cinderella-type story until someone pointed it out after I was done. Did you deliberately pattern it after the fairy tale, or was it something that just happened on its own?
JB:You’re like me — I didn’t realize I was writing a Cinderella story, either, until I was well into it. When I realized that was what I was doing, I had some fun playing with Cinderella motifs, but I never wanted my book to conform to a preexisting story. I wasn’t setting out to do a fairy tale retelling, just a fairy-tale like novel.

MF: I don’t feel so bad about missing that now. 🙂 Is there anything in your background — growing up or currently — that helped in creating this book? In what ways?
JB: Hm, that’s a tough question. In one sense, our stories spring from who we are, from our entire backgrounds and life experiences. If I’d lived a different life, I would have written a different book. But I can’t really draw a many lines between specifics in the book and specifics in my life. I love gemstones, though I’m the un-bling-est person you’ll ever meet. But I’m fascinated by the purity and clarity of stones. One of my favorite places to hang out is the gemstone exhibit at the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History. So I wrote that fascination into the magical gemstone in the store. I grew up on a farm where we had chickens, turkeys, pigs, rabbits, dogs, and cats, but no goats, so I threw in a goat.

MF: Do you have a favorite character or scene?
JB: I really do love all of the characters, but I probably feel the closest to Lucinda. We spent the most time together. My favorite scene is the one where Beryl is helping her get dressed for the ball. I cried when I wrote it. Isn’t that silly?

MF: What are your favorite five books, or five books you think everyone should read?
JB: Oh, I can’t possibly whittle it down to five! Here is a link to a document I’ve made listing favorite books.

MF: What can we expect from you next, if you don’t mind telling us?
JB: I’m working on a second book now for Bloomsbury, another fairy tale-like fantasy. I’m also working on a series of graphic novels for younger boys. My sister is the illustrator. It’s a good thing I can type fast. 🙂

MF: Thanks so much for your time!
JB: My pleasure. 🙂

You can read more of her writing at her blog.

June Jacket Flap-a-thon

I read 27 books this month (the 48 Hour Challenge helped…), which is nearly double my “usual” monthly total. Sometimes, I feel like I’m insane for reading SO much (not as many as some… I know that…). Other times — like this past weekend, when I was talking to the wife of one of Hubby’s friends (she’s an aspiring YA writer) — I realize how much I don’t know, how many books I haven’t read, and I wonder if there will ever be time enough to read them all.

Am I the only one who feels this way? (Probably not.)

Starting with the one worst:
Wintersmith (HarperTempest): “At 9, Tiffany Aching defeated the cruel Queen of Fairyland. At 11, she battled an ancient body-stealing evil. At 13, Tiffany faces a new challenge: a boy. And boys can be a bit of a problem when you’re thirteen. . . . But the Wintersmith isn’t exactly a boy. He is Winter itself—snow, gales, icicles—all of it. When he has a crush on Tiffany, he may make her roses out of ice, but his nature is blizzards and avalanches. And he wants Tiffany to stay in his gleaming, frozen world. Forever. Tiffany will need all her cunning to make it to Spring. She’ll also need her friends, from junior witches to the legendary Granny Weatherwax. They—Crivens! Tiffany will need the Wee Free Men too! She’ll have the help of the bravest, toughest, smelliest pictsies ever to be banished from Fairyland—whether she wants it or not. It’s going to be a cold, cold season, because if Tiffany doesn’t survive until Spring— —Spring won’t come.”
It’s not so bad, but it doesn’t really draw the reader in. It’s more dorky than anything, and this book is anything but dorky.

And on to the better stuff:

Whales on Stilts! (Harcourt, Inc.): “Monstrous Thrills! (Startling teeth! Cellos in fast cars! Photocopy repair!) Gruesome Chills! (Okay, maybe not that gruesome, but we’re trying to sell a book here.) Sidesplitting laughs! (Ouch. This is why my friend Bill wears a girdle). Swaying above them, outlined against the fresh morning sky, were the ominous shapes of the whales. They towered thirty feet high, their eyes glowing. They had spread their flukes. They drooled from their wet baleen. Lily stopped on her bike and stood for a second at the crest of a hill. She stared with horror at the scene of destruction down in the valley before her. The whales stepped on used car dealerships and a putt-putt golf course. They burned down trees in a trice with their laser-beam eyes. They stalked on rows through the countryside. They had to be stopped.”
I didn’t do this justice: the jacket flap cracked me up. Like the book.

Poison Study (Luna): “Choose: A quick death and hell or slow poison and hell. About to be executed for murder, Yelena is offered an extraordinary reprieve. She’ll eat the best meals, have rooms in the palace and risk assassination by anyone trying to kill the Commander of Ixia. And so Yelena chooses to become a food taster. But the chief of security, leaving nothing to chance, deliberately feeds her Butterfly’s Dust and only by appearing for her daily antidote will she delay an agonizing death from the poison. As Yelena tries to escape her new dilemma, disasters keep mounting. Rebels plot to seize Ixia and Yelena develops magical powers she can’t control. Her life is threatened again and choices must be made. But this time the outcomes aren’t so clear.”
This is one of those books that, had I been browsing, I would have picked up because the jacket-flap copy is really intriguing. A good balance between being enticing and not revealing too much.

Wicked Lovely (HarperTeen): “Rule #3: Don’t stare at invisible faeries. Aislinn has always seen faeries. Powerful and dangerous, they walk hidden in the mortal world. Aislinn fears their cruelty-especially if they learn of her Sight-and wishes she were as blind to their presence as other teens. Rule #2: Don’t speak to invisible faeries. Now faeries are stalking her. One of them, Keenan, who is equal parts terrifying and alluring, is trying to talk to her, asking questions Aislinn is afraid to answer. Rule #1: Don’t ever attract their attention. But it’s too late. Keenan is the Summer King, who has sought his queen for nine centuries. Without her, summer itself will perish. His is determined that Aislinn will become the Summer Queen at any cost-regardless of her plans or desires. Suddenly none of the rules that have kept Aislinn safe are working anymore, and everything is on the line: her freedom; her best friend, Seth; everything. Faery intrigue, mortal love, and the clash of ancient rules and modern expectations swirl together in Melissa Marr’s stunning twenty-first-century faery tale.”
Again, a good balance of intriguing and not giving too much away.

Other books read this month:
Magickeepers: The Eternal Hourglass
Don’t Call Me a Crook!
How Not to be Popular
The Painter from Shangahi
Clementine
The Chosen One
Here Lies Arthur
Magic Study
Fire Study
Hat Full of Sky
Manga Shakespeare: The Tempest
Forever Rose
The Talented Clementine
Keturah and Lord Death
Tales from Outer Suburbia
Girl Force
Atonement
Girl at Sea
Garden Spells
The Talisman Ring
That Summer
Ink Exchange
Alcatraz versus the Scrivener’s Bones
Nation

Nation

by Terry Pratchett
ages: 12+
First sentence: “Imo set out one day to catch some fish, but there was no sea.”

Mau is just a boy in the Nation — an island in the Pelagic Ocean — he’s off on Boy’s Island, in between souls, when the wave hits and wipes out his island. Left alone, he is despairing: how could the gods do this to the Nation? Then he meets Ermintrude (hereafter known as Daphne, since it’s a much more sensible name): a girl from England, who was on a ship that ended up crashing on the Nation because of the wave. At first — because this is how all things go — they were wary of each other, but then, when other refugees see the fire and come toward the island, they begin to forge a new Nation of their own.

I’m not terribly schooled in the world of Terry Pratchett, having only read the Tiffany Aching books, but I loved this one. It’s nothing like the Tiffany Aching books (and probably nothing like the Discworld ones, either), but it’s absolutely engrossing in its own way. M was just asking what it’s about, and it’s about many things: love and loss, religion and science, exploration and stagnation, discovering and retaining. But, it’s mostly the story of two people who figure out new ways of doing things, who find truth in the little things, and who manage to create something out of what had become nothing. It’s got all of Pratchett’s signature touches: the world is 90% ours, but it’s just off enough to make it fantastically different and wonderful. It’s full of love and life and humor. It doesn’t have a something-magical-happens ending (like in the Tiffany Aching books); in fact the ending is as far from magical as possible, and just about perfect.

In short: it’s storytelling at its finest.

Buy it at Amazon, Powell’s, or your local independent bookstore.

Book to Movie Friday: Jane Austen Book Club

I was looking for something light and fluffy the other night, and I lit upon this one searching in the Netflix instant play (can I tell you how much I love Netflix? I LOVE Netflix. A whole lot.). I remembered liking the book well enough, and I figured that while the movie wouldn’t be great, it might be enjoyable in a shallow, mindless, fluffy way. So I gave it a shot.

Afterward, when I checked my review, I was surprised how much the movie kept of the book, at least superficially. I don’t remember if the specifics were the same, or even if the arc of the story was the same (I think the book covered a longer time span then the movie did and maybe events were mix-mashed), but honestly, I don’t think it mattered. The plot was still mostly non-existent: the movie (like the book) just being an excuse for people (some screwed up, some more or less together) to sit around discussing, and possibly learning from (and learning to like), Jane Austen’s books. Which is not something I can argue with. I liked it.

I liked Hugh Dancy as the computer/sci-fi geek the best. The women were mostly stereotypes (the eccentric, the divorced woman, the gay younger woman, the control freak, and the screwed up one), but he was refreshing in the midst of all that estrogen. As time went on, and he learned more about Austen (when he first started he thought they were all sequels, which cracked me up), he actually had some refreshing insights (or at least the screenwriters gave him some) into Austen’s work. Which makes me wonder what Hubby would think about them, if he ever got around to reading them.

Verdict: probably as good as the book. Maybe better because it has Hugh Dancy in it. 🙂

Ink Exchange

by Melissa Marr
ages: 14+
First sentence: “Irial watched the girl stroll up the street; she was a bundle of terror and fury.”

Leslie has not had an easy life. With a deadbeat dad who drinks away everything she can earn, and a druggie brother who actually sold her body for drugs, things are not as cheerful as she makes them seem. She’s afraid, she feels out of control. Which is why she wants a tattoo: to do something to herself for herself.

But the tattoo that calls to her is a dangerous one: it’s the mark of the faerie Dark Court king, Irial. His court is barely surviving with the peace that has been established between the Summer and Winter courts. The Dark Faerie feed off of negative emotions: greed, lust, revenge, fear… and with peace there isn’t as many of those hanging around. And when Irial discovered that he was drawn to Leslie — as she was to him, even if she didn’t know it — he realized he could use their connection to feed his court: use Leslie as a conduit for mortals’ emotions.

This however has some unexpected consequences. First, Niall — advisor to the Summer King — is in love with Leslie, and even though he’s a Gancanagh (they’re addictive to women) he’s more than willing to do anything to protect her. Second, Leslie, while she’s attracted to the world at first, eventually realizes that this is no way to live.

It’s a dark novel, but less harsh than expected. Also, while it’s repelling in its subject matter, and the characters are not as likable as they could be, it’s an incredibly compelling read, as addicitive as Niall is to women. Which is a good thing, because it has a very satisfying and quite heroic ending. And that does much to help offset the darkness of the world Marr has created.

Buy it at Amazon, Powell’s, or your local independent bookstore.

Alcatraz Versus the Scrivener’s Bones

by Brandon Sanderson
ages: 10+
First sentence: “So, there I was, slumped in my chair, waiting in a drab airport terminal, munching absently on a bag of stale potato chips.”

I enjoyed the first one in this series enough that I should have jumped at the chance to read the second, especially after Becky’s and Tricia’s reviews reminded me how much I liked these.

The book picks up where Evil Librarians left off, basically (it’s been more than a year since I read the last one, and I didn’t really feel like I was missing anything). This time, however, Alcatraz needs to find his grandfather who has gone searching for his father in the (dreaded) Library of Alexandria (you only thought it was destroyed). Teamed up with Bastille and having met his uncle Kaz and cousin Australia — oh, and being chased by a member of the Scrivener’s Bones, a half-human, half-Alivened machine-thing that’s pretty ominous — he heads down into the bowels to see what he, and his Talent of Breaking things, can do.

Going back and rereading my review for Evil Librarians, I found that my reactions were similar: while I liked the snide comments, the tongue-in-cheek-ness, it also simultaneously annoyed me. I did think quite a few times as Sanderson/Alcatraz took detour after detour in the narrative that maybe it was several times too many. That maybe the fish and shoes and other distractions were a bit much. But, aside from that, it’s still a very enjoyable journey, with lots of asides about authors and writing (The Honorable Council of Fantasy Writers Whose Books are Way Too Long — the good old THCoFWWBAWTL; or the aside about serial killers wanting to read these books because they have some vendetta about the author, in which case, the author is not Brandon Sanderson or Alcatraz Smedry, but rather Garth Nix, who lives in Australia) that have absolutely nothing to do with the plot, but are entertaining nonetheless.

At any rate, even though it’s not as good as the first one, I’m still interested in where the story will go. After all, Alcatraz, torturer that he is, left us with a bit of a cliff-hanger. Which makes me curious.

Buy it at Amazon, Powell’s or your local independent bookstore.

Library Loot #24

Things I love about my library:
1. They catch books that we own that have mysteriously *cough* ended up in the library pile and get them back to me.
2. They commiserate with A, whose experiencing a bit of a loss because we got rid of our cats.
3. They chat with me about the books in my pile…
4. I can generally get everything I want, within reason, of course.
5. They’re just so danged nice.

I love my library. 🙂

For A/K:
Maisie Moo and Invisible Lucy, by Chris McKimmie
Boomer Goes to School, by Constance W. McGeorge/Illus. by Mary White
The Bravest Knight, Mercer Mayer
George and Martha, James Marshall**
Adele & Simon, by Barbara McClintock
Mirette and Bellini Cross Niagara Falls, by Emily Arnold McCully
Just a Minute, by Bonny Becker/Illus. by Jack E. Davis
Tea for Ruby (Paula Wiseman Books), by Sarah Ferguson, The Duchess of York/Illus. by Robin Preiss Glasser (A book that belongs on the BACA list instead of requisite Dora book…)
A Tree for Emmy, by Mary Ann Rodman/Illus. by Tatjana Mai-Wyss**
Lazy Little Loafers, by Susan Orlean/Illus. by G. Brian Karas

For M
City of Bones (Mortal Instruments), Cassandra Clare*
City of Ashes (Mortal Instruments), Cassandra Clare*

For me:
I have decided that July is going to be ARC and Challenge month, so I’m going to lay off on checking books out, since those usually get precedence. Hopefully. At any rate, both of these are for challenges…
Story of a Girl, by Sara Zarr
Echoes From the Dead, by Johan Theorin

The roundup is either at Reading Adventures or A Striped Armchair.

*Ones that M eventually read.
**Picture books we really liked.

That Summer

by Sarah Dessen
ages: 13+
First sentence: “It’s funny how one summer can change everything.”

I figured the best way to tackle the Sarah Dessen Challenge is to start at the beginning and work my way through to her most current one (Lock and Key excepted, of course.) And since this was her first book, I figured it was the best place to start.

There has been a lot of change in 15-year-old Haven’s life in the last couple of years. First, her dad — sportscaster Mac MacPheil — cheated on her mom with the weather woman — in one of those horrid name instances, Lorna Queen — and then they got divorced. Her older sister Ashley, who has spent her life bouncing from one boyfriend to another, and her have had a strained relationship for years. And the fact that Ashley has settled on boring Lucas (at least I think that’s his name), and is getting married in 29 days doesn’t help. On top of that, her mother is talking about going to Europe with a group of friends for an extended trip, and thinking about selling the house.

The only thing real in Haven’s life, it seems, is the past. And she remembers one of Ashely’s boyfriends — Sumner — best. He was the light in their life. He was what brought their family togehter. And it was after Ashley uncerimoniously dumped him on Halloween that Haven’s life started falling apart around her.

So, when Sumner shows back up in Haven’s life (right before Ashely’s wedding), she knows its Fate, a Sign.

The book follows Haven as she comes to terms with the changes in her life. And while it’s enjoyable, it’s not as fun or as engrossing as the other Dessen book I read. I wonder if she’s the type of author where the first book you read is your favorite… At any rate, it’s not a bad story, and at times I felt like Dessen captured a 15-year-old absolutely perfectly. It’s a difficult, awkward age, and to throw so many changes at the poor character… lets just say I was rooting for it all to come out okay. And I wasn’t disappointed.
Buy it at Amazon, Powell’s or your local independent bookstore.

The Talisman Ring

by Georgette Heyer
ages: 13+
First sentence: “Sir Tristram Shield, arriving at Lavenham Court in the wintry dusk, was informed at the door that his great-uncle was very weak, not expected to live many more days out.

For about a year now, I’ve seen reviews of Georgette Heyer’s books floating around the book blogs, and I’ve thought to myself that I ought to give one a whirl. But it wasn’t until Becky’s review of this book that I hit upon the perfect Heyer book to start with.

Think of Heyer this way: one part Jane Austen, one part P.G. Wodehouse, and one part Oscar Wilde, with some Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and Alexandre Dumas thrown in for good measure (and adventure). In short: absolutely delightful.

There’s an incredibly complex plot and a huge cast of characters, but all you really need to know is there are three cousins: Sir Tristram, severe and definately unromantic; Eustacie, young, French, silly, and desiring of an Adventure; and Ludovic, the heir to the Lavenham’s fortune, yet wrongly exiled for a murder he didn’t commit. Everyone at some point or other ends up at an inn where they meet Sir Hugh and Miss Sarah Thane, there is many Adventures (daring and otherwise), they flush out the Real Bad Guy and everyone lives Happily Ever After.

The real charm is in the sheer silliness of the novel. It’s a book about some of the silliest people I’ve ever “met”, which (of course) makes it absolutely hilarious and charming and plain fun to read. It’s not high literature by any means, but it’s definately worth the time.

Of course that means I’m going to go find another book of Heyer’s to read. Any suggestions?

Buy it at: Amazon, Powell’s or your local independent bookstore.